Brexit doom-monger, the International Monetary Fund, made failings over propping up the Greek economy and was too supportive of the Euro project, according to its top watchdog.

The US-based Independent Evaluation Office, said the IMF was unprepared for the debt crisis that hit Europe and slow to press for debt relief that might have eased Greece's economic pain.

And their report said the organisation 'remained upbeat' about the soundness of the European banking system in euro-area countries until after the start of the global financial crisis in mid-2007.

Brexit doom-monger, the International Monetary Fund, made failings over propping up the Greek economy and was too supportive of the Euro project, according to its top watchdog. IMF chief Christine Lagarde is pictured

'This lapse was largely due to the IMF's readiness to take the reassurances of national and euro area authorities at face value,' it said.

In the report released on Thursday, the watchdog declared the IMF's response to the debt crisis 'uneven.' The watchdog also suggested that the fund's decision-making was vulnerable to political pressure - a charge that IMF chief Christine Lagarde rejected.

RELATED ARTICLES

Share this article

Share

The 2008 financial crisis left European countries with enormous debts and weak banks. As part of a so-called troika with the European Commission and the European Central Bank, the IMF bailed out Greece, Ireland and Portugal in 2010-2011.

Greece has continued to struggle with high debts. To get the bailout money, Greece agreed to budget cuts and tax increases, which drove the economy into a deep recession and made it even harder to pay its debts.

The IMF was overly optimistic about Greece's economic prospects, the report said.

IMF policymakers, used to assisting poor, developing world countries, 'did not foresee the magnitude of the risks' in wealthy Europe.

The US-based Independent Evaluation Office, said the IMF was unprepared for the debt crisis that hit Europe and slow to press for debt relief that might have eased Greece's economic pain. People are pictured protesting in Greece during the crisis

Their ''Europe is different' mindset' prevented them from realising that investors would react to the debt problems by dumping European bonds, driving up interest rates in troubled countries and making their debt problems worse, the evaluation office said.

The IMF is not supposed to lend to countries whose debts are unsustainable. Analysts at the fund were divided over whether Greece's 2010 deal — trading bailout money for painful reforms — would leave it able to pay its bills. But the IMF went along with the original bailout 'even though its sovereign debt was not deemed sustainable with a high probability,' the report said.

The watchdog questioned whether IMF analysts buckled to political pressure from their troika partners, who wanted to provide the bailouts without offering Greece any debt relief.

It recommended that the IMF take steps to 'minimise the room for political intervention' in the future. But IMF Managing Director Lagarde rejected the idea, saying in a statement that she did 'not accept the premise of the recommendation ... and thus do not see the need to develop new procedures.'

The IMF is now calling for Greece's creditors to restructure the country's debts and has refused so far to go along with additional bailouts unless they include debt relief.

The Independent Evaluation Office is a Washington-based independent agency set up in 2001 to investigate IMF activities.